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Art & Art History
University of Mississippi

Printmaking: Beyond the Studio

Learning art is more than what’s learned in the traditional studio courses. Our courses are complemented with demonstrations, lectures, and critiques from faculty and visiting artists. Students can also join in the activities of the printmaking student organization, interact with visiting artists, volunteer with the UM Museum, take trips, and intern with a relevant site.


The Print Rebellion

The Print Rebellion is a group of advanced student printmakers led by Assistant Professor Lauren Cardenas. They participate in various events including the Double Decker Arts Festival, the Oxford Art Crawl and The Southern Graphics Council yearly conference. The organization sponsors community-based print projects throughout the year where the students have work for sale. The Print Rebellion brings many national and international visiting print artists to the department for demonstrations and lectures.

Follow our Printmaking area on social media! Check out their Instagram.


Art Talks

In addition to the artists who visit campus through The Print Rebellion, the department also has an established visiting artist program – Art Talks. This program creates access to artists in person and via webcam, and helps students and faculty to keep pace with critical thought, contemporary artistic practice, and emerging technology used in cultural production today.

The list of visiting printmaking artists includes:


UM Museum

Four of the last five years our museum has been named to EDsmart’s list of “51 Most Astounding University Museums”, with a recent ranking of 17—one spot ahead of Princeton University. Many art history students intern or volunteer with the UM Museum where they might work with art education programs or curate an exhibit.

In the museum, you can study the David M. Robinson Collection of Greek and Roman Antiquities, one of the finest collections in the United States. Covering the 1000-year period from 800 B.C. to around A.D. 300, the collection contains Greek and Roman sculpture, Greek decorated pottery, inscriptions, architectural fragments, inscribed Sumerian clay tablets, small artifacts in terracotta and bronze, Roman copies of Greek art works, ancient surgical instruments, and Greek and Roman coins.


Internships

Students and faculty can work together to identify relevant residenciesand internships to provide valuable work experience, professional networks, further application of skills learned at the university, and a stronger resume.

For those planning different career paths, the UM Office of Outreach’s formal Internship Experience program also assists students with internship placements in any career area of interest in Atlanta, New York City, and Washington D.C.


Study Abroad

Art history majors have exciting opportunities to experience the art and architecture abroad. They can arrange their own study abroad experience through the Office of Study Abroad. Or, they can travel with UM faculty.

One possibility is the formal course titled Art on Location, where UM faculty can take a course of students to different locations around the US and abroad. For example, in the 2-week 2019 Winter Intersession, art historian Dr. Louise Arrizoli teamed up with a French professor to offer a study of art in Paris, France